1 / 19

Alberto F. Cabrera Professor Erin Ward Bibo Doctoral Student

Starting Early, Staying on Track: A Chronological Review of Critical Steps Along the Path to College. Alberto F. Cabrera Professor Erin Ward Bibo Doctoral Student Department of Educational Leadership, Higher Education, & International Education University of Maryland.

keira
Download Presentation

Alberto F. Cabrera Professor Erin Ward Bibo Doctoral Student

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Starting Early, Staying on Track: A Chronological Review of Critical Steps Along the Path to College Alberto F. Cabrera Professor Erin Ward Bibo Doctoral Student Department of Educational Leadership, Higher Education, & International Education University of Maryland

  2. Path To College is a Longitudinal Process Predisposition & choices Collegiate Experiences & Behaviors Outcomes Family Encouragement & Involvement Academic Integration Competencies Graduate School Employment & Income Preparation for College Social Integration Satisfaction & Commitment K-16 Communication & Engagement Job Performance Facilities & Services Persistence Transfer Stop-out Aspirations & Plans Job Satisfaction Climate & Diversity Degree Completion Awareness of College Characteristics, Admission Standards, & Costs Loan Repayment Financial Aid Mix

  3. College Choice Process for 1000 Lowest SES Students College Qualifications High School Graduation 4-year College Applications Institution Type of First Enrollment 70 Applied to 4-year Institution 477 Graduated 714 Not Qualified 237 Did Not Graduate 407 Did Not Apply 46 Applied to 4-year Institution 132 Graduated 1000 8th Graders in 1988 134 Minimally Qualified 86 Did Not Apply 2 Did Not Graduate 99 Applied to 4-year Institution 151 Graduated 151 Qualified 52 Did Not Apply 0 Did Not Graduate Cabrera& La Nasa (2000). Understanding the college choice process. Jossey Bass

  4. A Case for Starting Early • Preparation for college begins as early as the 7th grade (Cabrera & LaNasa, 2000 ; Hossler, Schmit & Vesper, 1999) • Preparation for college is the result of a complex process marked by plans and expectations, curriculum choices, taking pre-college & college admission tests, applying for college, enrolling and succeeding in college (Adelman, 1999, 2006; Bowen, Chingos & McPherson, 2009; Cabrera & LaNasa, 2001; Cabrera, Burkum & LaNasa, 2005) • While 80% of 8th graders expressed an intent to attend college, only 47% of high school graduates enroll in college (NCES,2010 ; Wimberly & Noeth, 2005) • What happens over this five-year period to create such a stark difference between aspiration and outcomes? • Students who particularly struggle through the transition to ninth grade are more likely to drop out of high school (Grossman & Cooney, 2009)

  5. Why Focus on Low-Income Students? • Poorest 8th grade students are more likely to be exposed to at-risk factors including: • History of high school dropouts in family • Raised by a single parent • Changing schools more than twice • Low-income students are more likely to drop out of high school than their peers (Cabrera & LaNasa, 2001; Cabrera, Burkum & LaNasa, 2005) • 77% of poorest 8th graders have parents unfamiliar with college (Cabrera & LaNasa, 2001; Cabrera et al., 2005) • Only 15% of low-income 8th graders are college-qualified by the end of high school (Cabrera & LaNasa, 2001) • 61% of low-income high school graduates start at community college, irrespective of their college qualifications (Cabrera & LaNasa, 2001; Cabrera et al., 2005) • Poorest students' baccalaureate degree completion rate lags nearly 44% behind that of their upper-SES counterparts (Cabrera et al., 2005)

  6. Why Focus on Latino/a Students? • By 2020, Latinos will comprise 25% of the US school-age population (Pew Foundation,2005) • 98% increase from 2005 • Latino parents are less likely to have attended college than African American or White parents (Swail, Cabrera, Lee & Williams, 2004; Swail, Cabrera & Lee, 2005) • 27.7% of Latino/a 8th graders are college-qualified by the 12th grade (Swail et al., 2004, 2005) • Compared to 47.4% of White 8th graders • Latino students are 8 percentage points more likely to enroll in a 2-year institution than their White peers (Swail et al., 2004, 2005) • 23.2% of Latino/a postsecondary students graduate with a four-year degree within 10 years of leaving high school (Swail et al, 2004, 2005) • Compared to 47.3% of White postsecondary students

  7. Critical Steps Along the Path to College Establishing Career & Educational Attainment Goals Taking & Succeeding in College Preparatory Coursework Learning about Postsecondary Options Taking Pre-College & College Entrance Exams Graduating High School Applying to College Enrolling in College Successfully Transferring to a 4-year institution (among community college students) Successfully Completing a Baccalaureate Degree

  8. Critical Steps Along the Path to College: Achieving Each Task

  9. Critical Steps Along the Path to College: Achieving Each Task

  10. Critical Steps Along the Path to College: Achieving Each Task

  11. What matters most for the attainment of a bachelors’ degree among Latina/o students?

  12. The role of planning & parental expectations for Latino middle school students

  13. The role of academic preparation

  14. Postsecondary experiences: Performance in college

  15. In Conclusion… Latino students are much more likely to earn a BA or higher if they: • are supported by their families in the pursuit of a postsecondary education • create a plan by the eighth grade • take three years of mathematics or more • start at a four-year institution • maintain continuous enrollment • Earn a GPA of 2.50 or above

  16. Elementary Schools Middle Schools Two-Year Institutions Four-Year Institutions Business organizations Community organizations PTAs GEAR-UP TRIO Intervention strategies need to be Holistic,Sustained over time and involve Multiple Partners

  17. References Adelman, C. (1999). Answers in the tool box: Academic intensity, attendance patterns, and bachelor’s degree attainment. Document # PLLI 1999-8021. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement Attewell, P. & Lavin, D.E. (2007). Passing the torch: Does Higher Education for the disadvantaged pay off across the generations? New York: Russell Sage Foundation. Bowen, W., Chingos, M.M. & McPherson, M. S. (2009). Crossing the finishing line: Completing college at America’s public universities. Princeton University. Bowen, W.G., Kurzweil, M.A., & Tobin, E.M. (2005). Equity and excellence in American higher education. The “elite” schools: Engines of opportunity or bastions of privilege? (pp. 122-136). Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press. Hagedorn, L.S., Cabrera, A.F., & Prather, G. (2010-11) The Community College Transfer Calculator: Identifying the Course-Taking Patterns that Predict Transfer. Journal of College Student Retention, 12(1), 105-130. Hossler, D., Schmit, J., & Vesper, N. (1999). Going to college: How social, economic, and educational factors influence the decisions students make. Maryland, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.

  18. References Cabrera, A. F. & La Nasa, S. M. (2000). Understanding the college choice of disadvantaged students. New Directions for Institutional Research. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Cabrera, A. F. & La Nasa, S. M. (2001). On the path to college: Three critical tasks facing America’s disadvantaged. Research in Higher Education, 42(2), 119-150. Cabrera, A. F., Burkum, K. R. & La Nasa, S. M. (2005). Pathways to a four year degree: Determinants of transfer and degree completion. In A. Seidman (Ed.). College Student Retention: A Formula for Student Success (pp. 155-209). ACE/Praeger series on Higher Education. Hossler, D., Schmit, J., & Vesper, N. (1999). Going to college: How social, economic, and educational factors influence the decisions students make. Maryland, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.

  19. References 19 McDonald, Botti & Clark (2007). From visibility to autonomy: Latinos in Higher Education in the US, 1965-2005. University of Maryland, College Park Volkwein, J. F.(2010). Overcoming obstacles to campus assessment (pp. 47-63). In J. F. Volkwein (Editor). Spring Supplement. New Directions for Institutional Research. Volume 2010. Jossey-Bass. Swail, W. S., Cabrera, A.F., Lee, C., & Williams, A. (2004). Part I: From middle school to the work force: Latino students in the Educational Pipeline. Washington, DC.: The Educational Policy Institute. http://educationalpolicy.org/pdf/LatinoI.pdf Swail, W. S., Cabrera, A. F. & Lee, Ch. (2005). Part II: Latino High School and Baccalaureate graduates: A comparison. The Pew Hispanic Center/USC Annenberg School for Communications .Washington, DC: Educational Policy Institute, Inc. http://educationalpolicy.org/pdf/LatinoII.pdf Swail, W. S., Cabrera, A.F., Lee, C., & Williams, A. (2005). Part III: Pathways to the bachelor’s degree for Latino students. Washington, DC.: The Educational Policy Institute. http://educationalpolicy.org/pdf/LatinoIII.pdf

More Related